7,243 research outputs found

    The cultivation of (difficult) surfaces or “I know that’s a tree”

    No full text
    To coincide with the exhibition Real Painting at the Castlefield Gallery in Manchester Craig Staff, author of After Modernist Painting: The History of a Contemporary Practice (2013), offered his response to the exhibition, considering it in relation to painting’s histories, theories and philosophies. From connections with the Renaissance and modernism, he will venture towards the means by which we might begin to think about, if not understand the works that make up Real Painting

    Author Peter FitzSimons speaking at the National Library of Australia, Canberra, 13 November 2012 /

    No full text
    Title from acquisitions documentation.; Part of the collection: Portraits of author Peter FitzSimons speaking at the National Library of Australia, Canberra, 13 November 2012.; Acquired in digital format; access copy available online.; Mode of access: Online.; Photographed by a staff member of the National Library of Australia

    Marking Movements - new drawings by Catherine Flexen and Craig Staff

    No full text
    Keen to support artists working today, the Art Gallery & Museum invited Catherine Flexen and Craig Staff to create work specifically for Gallery 13. This exhibition of new drawing explores the way in which the body is involved as the maker of marks, rather than as the subject of representation. For both artists, the form that their drawings eventually take is a result of a lengthy process of physical activity, although in very contrasting ways. Whereas for Flexen drawing is a response to the physical motion of walking in the Cotswolds, for Staff it is a consideration of the fragility of human concentration and the body's capabilitie

    Professor Peter Singer speaking at the National Press Club Canberra, 11 February 2009 [picture] /

    No full text
    Title devised by cataloguer based on information from acquisitions documentation.; Part of the collection: Humanitarian author Professor Peter Singer at the National Press Club, Canberra, 11 February 2009.; Acquired in digital format; access copy available online.; Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.; Photographed by a staff member of the National Library of Australia, 2009

    Bill Clinton Gubernatorial record group; Economic Development series; Craig Smith subseries

    No full text
    This subseries contains the working papers of Craig Smith, who served on Governor Clinton's staff as Senior Executive Assistant for Economic Development from 1987 to 1991

    Dr. Craig Kinsley – Faculty Author Interview

    No full text
    Dr. Craig Kinsley, Professor of Psychology and co-author of Clinical Neuroscience, discusses this unique textbook that integrates neurobiological mechanisms of general health into the coverage of mental disorders. By using this resource, instructors can easily integrate principles of neuroscience into clinical, developmental, behavioral, cognitive, and social psychology. The second edition of Clinical Neuroscience will be published in early 2010

    Craig Staff

    No full text

    Episode 8: VIP Special Guest Craig McCallum, General Manager Swinburne Professional

    No full text
    Join us in the latest episode of SPSN's Swinburne Professional Staff Podcast as we chat with the General Manager of Swinburne Professional, Craig McCallum. Listen in as we learn more about Craig and his role and also how he will be celebrating his first year at Swinburne. We also learn how the Swinburne Professional team has grown over the past 12 months and discuss the latest research from the Centre for the New Workforce and the importance of connecting and re-connecting with staff. Kristy & Ash talk about their recent successes presenting at AusEdPodCon and TEMC2021 and how it all came about by writing "our story", Not Just Another Podcast. We discuss all the hard topics such as Cherry Ripe Slice or Vanilla Slice, flying foxes in Melbourne, and how we are celebrating our new FREEDOMS this weekend. We cover it all! It’s a GREAT Chat. Thanks for listening - Kristy & Ash. Sound Effects Credit: Adobe Stock

    Eleanore Mikus, Neo-Expressionism and the Things Themselves

    Full text link
    Mikus’s relationship to Neo-Expressionism began during the years 1966-1967 with Zoo Visit and Happy Holidays, two crayon drawings both from 1966 and Fortuna, a painting on paper the artist made the following year. From that point, and in 1968, Mikus began work on what would prove to be an extensive body of Neo-Expressionist paintings and drawings. Working with acrylic paint, over a 17-year period she produced in total over 100 paintings, a substantive body of work which encompassed the Red series

    Eleanore Mikus, Neo-Expressionism and the Things Themselves

    Full text link
    Mikus’s relationship to Neo-Expressionism began during the years 1966-1967 with Zoo Visit and Happy Holidays, two crayon drawings both from 1966 and Fortuna, a painting on paper the artist made the following year. From that point, and in 1968, Mikus began work on what would prove to be an extensive body of Neo-Expressionist paintings and drawings. Working with acrylic paint, over a 17-year period she produced in total over 100 paintings, a substantive body of work which encompassed the Red series
    corecore